,þ>t , :r ^ .... Ii. ;', 16 '1æ : I r I I >t(, -.-.. .'; 0( .:::' '\ ., - " %' / ..-- f '" \ I ::: '..x.. I 4( v'" ,. ox ' ' " .., " . ..>>.;f . ' ,"" þ ". >>:. '" '.' " ., , '. 33 ...,.. <: / ,1'.".' .. . ., Y" .,.....:. -. ........- " f f f^ , ... . -- , <( \ " , " r * ,. ,.. r ' "1 '-I ' I ' '-- .... '::::. -.; - . I '\: ;.:' ., " ?,,': '''i>- -+ . :j '. i ,/ "" >; "', '^ , 'J " , -'\.. .;. .,.. i 'i' .', v .> ^ ! # J (,1' *' " f df 1 ,< J ;1 " " ". /. l-. " , "'? . ^\, r "' ' f J -.. 4 H" ,. " .l , "'1 , , '''-- f t ' { , \ $( .. q,. 4' ii4' ;; "" """ ",. t - ...-, " (( Hiell, that about winds it up, folks. VJié hope you've enjoyed listening to our description of this exciting tournament as much as we enjoyed bringing it to you.'" the Indian independence movements in N ew York), as well as the "Cyclo- paedia of Universal Biography" and "Werner's Universal Encyclopedia," both of which were about ready to fall apart from wear.. He was also fond of reading the Bible, which a neighbor saw him doing in his apartment on the Sunday before he went to Washington. (He was reared as a Catholic but long ago abandoned the observance of any ritual.) In his death-row cell in the prison of the District of Columbia, his reading has been constant and universal, ranging from Shakespeare to "The Origin of Species," "Gulliver's Trav- els," "Westward Ho!," "Social Be- havior in Ancient Rome," "Wayfarer in China," and "Ivanhoe." With the aId of textbooks from the prison library, he has been teaching himself Latin, and has made sufficIent progress in it to have tackled Cicero. Furthermore, he has been teaching Spanish to a prisoner in an adjoining cell, a man who, like himself, has reason to believe that he may not much longer require the use of any language. The segment of history that has had , .J."..Ç. ,I . . an almost incandescent effect on Col- lazo is Puerto Rican history. He has not only an overwhelming interest in but an overwhelming sympathy for his peo- ple-sympathy because he unwaver- Ingly sees them as the victIms of American imperialism and American indifference. "How little the American people know of Puerto Rico!" he ex- claImed at his trial. "I am sure even now that the American people-nInety- nine per cent of them-don't know where Puerto Rico is. They don't know what is Puerto Rico. They don't know Puerto Rico is a posseSSIon of the United States, even though It has been so for the last fifty-two years." Collazo's Spanish accent, ordinarily not very noticeable, thickens perceptibly when he talks about what he considers Ameri- can injustices to Puerto Rico, and his eyes glitter behind his steel-rimmed glasses. Collazo made common cause with many Puerto Ricans in and around N ew York as fellow-victims of Ameri- can exploitation and indifference. At the Style Metal Specialties Company, makers of costume jewelry and picture frames, on West Thirty-eighth Street, where he was a metal polisher for four years, starting in the fall of 1941, he was a sort of benevolent patriarch of the Puerto Ricans who worked there. "Whenever we took on a Puerto Rican-and what with the manpower shortage, we had quite a few in those days-Collazo would make a point of thanking me sincerely, explaining that it was hard for his people to find work because of their language and the dis- crimination against them," Irving Greenfield, president of the company, now located at 30 East Twenty-first Street, recalled recently. "He would buy pads and pencils and cheap Span- ish-English dictionaries, and at lunch- time he would give English lessons at a big table in the shop." On Sundays, Collazo would often go to LaGuardia Field to meet the heavIly loaded planes from San Juan, whose passenger lists generally included a high percentage of poor Puerto Ricans coming here to look for work. "Sometimes he would stand at the gate wIth tears in his eyes," a friend who accompanied him on a couple of the expeditions said not long ago. Collazo would introduce himself